MicroBiology-Draft/Sample

(Steven Felgate) #1

Figure 2.8 The fluorescent dyes absorbed by these bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells emit brilliant colors
when excited by ultraviolet light under a fluorescence microscope. Various cell structures absorb different dyes. The
nuclei are stained blue with 4’,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI); microtubles are marked green by an antibody
bound to FITC; and actin filaments are labeled red with phalloidin bound to tetramethylrhodamine (TRITC).



  • Which has a higher frequency: red light or green light?

  • Explain why dispersion occurs when white light passes through a prism.

  • Why do fluorescent dyes emit a different color of light than they absorb?


Magnification, Resolution, and Contrast


Microscopes magnify images and use the properties of light to create useful images of small objects.Magnification
is defined as the ability of a lens to enlarge the image of an object when compared to the real object. For example, a
magnification of 10⨯ means that the image appears 10 times the size of the object as viewed with the naked eye.


Greater magnification typically improves our ability to see details of small objects, but magnification alone is not
sufficient to make the most useful images. It is often useful to enhance theresolutionof objects: the ability to tell that
two separate points or objects are separate. A low-resolution image appears fuzzy, whereas a high-resolution image
appears sharp. Two factors affect resolution. The first is wavelength. Shorter wavelengths are able to resolve smaller
objects; thus, an electron microscope has a much higher resolution than a light microscope, since it uses an electron
beam with a very short wavelength, as opposed to the long-wavelength visible light used by a light microscope. The
second factor that affects resolution isnumerical aperture, which is a measure of a lens’s ability to gather light. The
higher the numerical aperture, the better the resolution.


Read thisarticle (http://www.openstaxcollege.org/l/22aperture)to learn more
about factors that can increase or decrease the numerical aperture of a lens.

Even when a microscope has high resolution, it can be difficult to distinguish small structures in many specimens
because microorganisms are relatively transparent. It is often necessary to increasecontrastto detect different


Link to Learning


Chapter 2 | How We See the Invisible World 39

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